America

Operation Just Cause


Walter Louis Hall

My grandfather served in the Korean War as did my step-grandfather. So did my great-uncle Bob. They came home to loved ones.

Walter Louis Hall did not.

I, myself, am currently active with the Maine Army National Guard as an E4 with the Fire Direction Center. As did Lt. Hall, I stand ready and willing to serve my country. I know how I would feel having to leave my family and loved ones to serve in a war-stricken country with the possibility of never coming home, but it is a call I answered with strong conviction. Operation Just Cause allows me and you to get involved in yet another way. My name may appear on someone's page someday . . . so please support this Cause and adopt your own POW/MIA. Get involved. It will mean a great deal to their families and friends.



Name: Walter Louis Hall
Rank/Branch: 02/US Army
Unit: 118th Aviation Company, 145th Aviation Battalion, 1st Aviation Brigade
Date of Birth: 25 February 1940 (Bangor, Maine)
Home City of Record: Old Town, Maine
Loss Date: 10 June 1965
Status (in 1973): Killed/Body Not Recovered
Category: 1
Acft/Vehicle/Ground: UH1B
Other Personnel in Incident: Joseph J. Compa; Robert L. Curlee; Craig L. Hagen; Bruce G. Johnson; Fred M. Owens; Donald R. Saegaert (all missing)

REMARKS: J010 ON GND SED ALL DED - J



Synposis

On May 25, 1965, Special Forces Detachment A-342 was airlanded at Dong Xoai, a district capital of Phuoc Long Province, through which the Viet Cong supply lifeline from Cambodia into War Zone D tracked. The Special Forces Detachment, together with Navy Seabees, built a camp and among other duties, assumed the MACV subsector role for Don Luan district.

Intermittent Viet Cong mortar rounds lobbed into the new camp and were considered only the usual harassment, but sightings of large VC formations nearing the town increased.

At 2310 hours on the night of June 9, CIDG teams around the camp's perimeter were silenced by the 762nd and 763rd VC Regiments. There was no opportunity to warn the camp and only a few survived. At 2330, the camp was heavily mortared and came under a heavy ground assault. The camp was overrun, and most of the CIDG and LLDB withdrew.

At the camp, 2Lt. Charles Q. Williams, seriously wounded, was directing the defense of the compound with singular valor and would later be awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor for his actions at Dong Xoai.

Before South Vietnamese relief forces could arrive, a team of advisors was sent in from Than Son Nhut, where MACV was headquartered. The team was aboard a UH1B helicopter from the 188th Aviation Company flown by Lt. Walter L. Hall. The crew consisted of Sgt. Craig L. Hagen, gunner; SSgt. Joseph J. Compa, crew chief; and WO Donald Saegaert, co-pilot. The advisors from MACV Special Detachment 5891 were SSgt. Robert L. Curlee, the medic; and Capt. Bruce G. Johnson and SRC Fred M. Owens, advisors.

When the helicopter was disembarking troops on a plantation landing zone, it came under heavy mortar and small arms fire. The helicopter took off and started a climbing turn. Upon clearing some buildings left of the landing zone, the helicopter went into uncontrolled flight and in crashing, skidded into some parked vehicles and burst into flames.

A circling pilot immediately established radio contact with Johnson, who stated that he was standing by the downed helicopter and that the crew and other two advisors with him were dead. He reported that the situation was very bad - not to send anyone else in. Johnson stated that he was under heavy fire, and two mortar shells were subsequently seen to land in his vicinity.

A subsequent search of the crash site was conducted when the area was resecured (on June 15), but no American remains were found, nor was Johnson seen. Villagers in the area reproted that an American had been captured on that day, but no verifiable information has surfaced since that time. Villagers also stated that the Viet Cong had carried away the bodies of 7 Americans and had buried them.

A captured Viet Cong film entitled "Dong Xoai in Flames" pictured the bodies of five or six Americans as well as several crashed helicopters. One of these helicopters bore the serial number 38557. The name tag "Owens" and the last two letters of another name tag, "ll" (possibly Hall's) are shown in the film, lending some more credence to the report that the Viet Cong took possession of the aircraft and that all aboard were killed.

There is no real reason to suspect that any of the seven men aboard the UH1B shot down at Dong Xoai are, indeed, alive. But there is no question that the communists know the fate of these men. All of these men can be easily accounted for. It appears that Johnson, at least, may have been captured. Mounting evidence indicates that Americans are still being held prisoner in Southeast Asia today. As long as even one American remains alive and held unjustly, we owe him our best effort to bring him home.

I cannot emphasize enough how important it is to keep pushing this issue inside the Beltway . . . the need to get specific answers is more important now than ever before. If still alive, some MIA's are now in their 70s . . . they don't have much time left. We have to demand the answers from the bureaucrats and keep standing on their necks (figuratively speaking) until they get the message that THEY work for US and that we are serious about getting these long overdue responses. Diplomatic considerations aside . . . we can no longer allow questionable protocols established by pseudo-aristocratic armchair strategists, to determine or influence the fate of the men who were in the trenches while the diplomats were sharing sherry and canapes and talking about "Their Plans" for the future of SE Asia.

If you'd like to see what some others are doing in addition to writing their congressmen, senators, and the Whitehouse, check out some of these sites.

Another remarkable site is by an 11-year-old angel who never even set foot on American soil . . . she not only put up a page . . . she started a major project for an organization of Kids on the Net called KeyPals International. Don't miss her Bring Grandpa Home page. If you come away from that site without a lump in your throat, then you just weren't paying attention.

I can't stress enough to you to get involved with Operation Just Cause. Involvement is just a click away on the bracelet below.

My thoughts and prayers are with Lt. Hall and his family.



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This Operation Just Cause Web Ring site is owned by Corey "Coredog" Cone

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